see. did you know for the longest time i wanted to be a fourth grade teacher because of you? i was not aware of inspiring anyone. i think you did exactly what teachers are supposed to do. they create a spark for learning. that s the reason i have a talk show today. oprah winfrey now dominates the talk show circuit, both in the ratings and popularity. i want to use my life as a source of lifting people up. that s what i want to do. that s what i do every day on my show. we get accused of being tabloid television and sensational and so fort, but i really think what we do is serve as a voice to a lot of people who felt up until my show or some of the others that they were alone. this is what 67 pounds of fat looks like. i can t, i can t lift it. it is amazing to me that i can t lift it, but i used to carry it around every day. there s nothing more endearing to an audience than to have that kind of honesty and
confirm there were multiple victims. i can t confirm their status or the numbers. that is all we have right now as far as the active scene. we have established a reunification site anybody who got separated. we re asking them to report to mcarthur elementary school. at this time we will be giving tactical briefs. but like as i said, this is a possible homicide scene and this will be locked done and twn and the cri investigation will start. anymore concrete information will come from city leaders, from eeoc i mean correction, the eoc. that location will be announced and we will be able to hear from the city leaders, chief of police, mayor, so fort. this location will be a tactical
counsel, but just how outside the norm it is to be on such a political war footing at this point in an investigation. i think it s really remarkable how fast we ve gotten here. you know, when prosecutors go after presidents, it is something we ve seen before that the president and the defenders around him attack the prosecutor as biased and on a witch hunt, so fort. we saw that with the ken starr investigation versus the clintons. we saw that when pat fitzgerald was going after the valerie plame leak in the bush white house and ended up indicting the chief of staff to vice president cheney for lying to investigators. you know, these sort of criminal cases cross over into the political sphere and shift to football instead of baseball, essentially. but, you know, it took a long time for those cases to do that. the starr case was several years in when we suddenly not suddenly, when it evolved to point of this amount of vitreal. bob mueller has been on the job for a couple weeks.
kissinger in the opera, nixon in china. slow down and let s see. bernard? how do we trust iran. they re still busy with terrorism. that s the question. it s not a good country. they re a state sponsor of terrorisms. bernard, why trust them? use the quote from one of my not so favorite presidents but my favorite line, trust but verify. that s what ronald reagan said. that s the centerpiece of the deal and the president laid out a persuasive case. we cannot allow iran to build a nuclear weapon. so we can go forward with the deal, making sure that we have full transparency, unfettered access inspection, and so fort, guaranteed by not just the united states but by six major world powers, or bomb iran and bomb the nuclear program back a few years. the latter option would be extraordinarily dangerous. the first option is preferred, but by no means assured, and i think we ll have to use congress
into the streets of caracas yesterday mourning the death of president hugo chavez who lost his battle with cancer. his body will remain in state for three days. his funeral will be held this friday. venezuela s constitution states elections will be held within the next 30 days. the vice president will serve as an interim head of state. until then, hugo chavez was 58 years old. richard haass, looking ahead, also looking back at his legacy. well, chavez was the ultimate populist. and he was literally and figuratively fueled by the increase in oil prices. it gave him the capacity to do what he wanted to do at home. a massive redistribution of wealth inside venezuela. it gave him a chance to run a really active foreign policy. he essentially had his own agency for international development. and he would put billions of dollars through subsidized oil and the rest into places like cuba, nicaragaragua and so fort. his vision for latin america that was extraordinarily radical. he was not dem